One Trader Finds A ‘Better’ Way To Short The Bond Market

Authored by Kevin Muir via The Macro Tourist,

This morning I have decided to write about US swap spreads. I know, you are already reaching for the delete key, but wait…

I tried to remember a time when swap spreads were exciting. I dug back into my memory, and tried to recall something that might spice up this snoozer of a topic.

And then it hit me. Swap spreads were one of the positions that bankrupted the fabled 1990’s hedge fund darling, Long Term Capital Management. So I started digging. And I will get to the swap spread portion of the story in a bit, but not until I share with you some other tidbits I stumbled across.

Did you know LTCM marketed themselves as the “Financial Technology Company?”

http://ift.tt/2u3KXK3

They actively bragged about their quantitative abilities.

What distinguishes LTCM is our remarkable talent. The quality, background and recognition of our employees is top notch. Our various strategy teams are comprised of a unique combination of specialists in trading, economics, mathematics, and computer science. They include individuals who were the major contributors to the world of finance in the last 25 years and directly involved in the development and application of many of the strategies and products traded in the market today.

The academic and professional backgrounds of LTCM’s Principals and other strategists include faculty positions at major universities, two Nobel Laureates, and service in government, including a former Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. This distinguished group, many of whom have advanced degrees, have worked together for many years, and have considerable experience in the design and implementation of large-scale trading and financial technology.

Man oh man, that sure sounds familiar to some of today’s quantitative trading darlings. And have a look at the returns of LTCM over the life of their fund.

http://ift.tt/2tusitH

Look at that steady rise from 1994 to 1998. Remind you of anybody?

I know today’s quantitative gurus will tell you their strategies look nothing like LTCM. And I am sure they are correct. There is no way they will make the same mistakes. Yet I wonder if they will make a whole new set of errors.

Don’t forget, once upon a time everyone was just as confident that LTCM was a new breed of hedge fund that could also do no wrong.

http://ift.tt/2u415ek

It makes me laugh at how much the original quantitative hedge fund marketing resembles the same narratives we see in today’s market. It’s been a while, but I am going to re-read Roger Lowenstein’s account of the LTCM debacle, When Genius Failed, this summer. And for those that want a good chuckle, I suggest you take a look at Brian Langis’ immortalization of LTCM’s marketing materials. Thanks to Brian we can see the cringe worthy pictures of another age (WTF were they thinking with page 6?). And while you’re at it, give Brian’s other posts a read – it’s an eclectic mix of pieces, but worth following.

http://ift.tt/2tuOG65

Now back to the actual reason for this post – swap spreads. For those who complain that sometimes I get too technical, thanks for reading up to this point. But for those who are interested in maybe finding some more products to trade, soldier on.

In the mid 1990s, one of LTCM’s largest positions was short US swap spreads. Back then swaps traded at higher rates than US treasuries. LTCM viewed the extra basis points that the market demanded due to the perceived credit risk of trading against a bank versus the US government, as unnecessarily high. So LTCM shorted US government bonds and went long swaps. The US year swap spread (the difference between 30 year government rates and equivalent swaps) was trading at 43 basis points. For a while, their trade worked. They earned the extra 43 bps, and in the meantime, spreads began to narrow (like they had predicted). Their short US swap spread position helped contribute to their Madoff like returns. But then the financial world became more unstable.

http://ift.tt/2u468eV

Next thing they knew, swap spreads were widening. And before the whole debacle was finished, spreads had blown out to previously unheard of wides. It was one of their biggest losses, and their theories were relished to the dustbin.

In the ensuing years, swap spreads narrowed. It took a while, but as Federal Reserve eased in the aftermath of the DotCom bust and the 9/11 tragedy, spreads returned to the levels LTCM had originally shorted.

But as the economy returned to normal, spreads bounced from those low levels, and eventually started climbing. Then as the real estate credit disaster became evident, spreads blew out to new highs. For a brief moment, it looked like we were going to experience another LTCM moment with spreads exploding higher again.

http://ift.tt/2tuRTCD

Yet instead of blowing out to new highs in the midst of the great financial crisis, swap spreads did the exact opposite! They collapsed and in the process, did what everyone thought impossible – they went negative.

http://ift.tt/2u44tGk

It made no sense. Why would an investor enter into an agreement with a bank (that might go bankrupt – especially in 2008) for less than the rate on US government treasuries?

Yet the impossible happened.

I have written a few times about this paradox – How many other could never happens are out there? and Only for the bravest and stupidest. No need for me to rehash my theories.

I started getting long swap spreads in October of 2016. Proving once again that you are better off born lucky than smart, I was fortunate enough to bottom tick the 30 year swap spread (don’t worry, I blew all the profits on my disastrous curve steepening call).

I stuck with the position, and in April of 2017, I wrote about some reasons for the widening – The Fed has shifted (and the market has missed it).

And recently, the market is starting to wake up to these arguments. First, banks are feeling more confident under the Trump regime that they will be able to extend balance sheet without being scolded by regulators. Secondly, the idea that the Fed’s balance sheet reduction will source volatility out of the market and cause more mortgaged-backed hedging to move into the swap market might be starting to be priced in. Third, and most importantly, the idea that rates might no longer be headed lower could be slowing down the demand for swaps.

For whatever reason, the swap market anomaly is finally drifting away. Granted, it is a slow drip, but it’s happening.

http://ift.tt/2u4dkrq

Bit by bit, the stupidity of negative spreads is disappearing. Now, maybe this piece is about to top tick the swap spread move. After all, I know next to nothing about this space. But it sure seems like a trade that might end up as a surprise win that few are watching.

You are probably wondering how to execute this trade. Well, Goldman rejected my ISDA application, so for mopes like me, we need to stick to the listed futures market.

But don’t let that stop you. It’s quite easy. Dial the two symbols in your Bloomberg terminal, and type PDH2 to get the Position Hedging ratios. Here is the 30 year swap future versus the long bond future calcuation:

http://ift.tt/2tuPMio

If you are like me, and a big fixed income bear, then you don’t even need to worry about the spread. Shorting the swap outright is 30 basis points better than treasuries. If you get a backup in yield, along with a continued widening of swap spreads, it could simply a better product to be outright short.

http://ift.tt/2u404Tz

Although the swap spread has moved over the past year, I think there still might be more to come. Have a look at trading swap futures for a little extra pickup.

P.S.: When I wrote my last piece about swaps, a nice fellow from the ERIS Exchange contacted me to let me know about their competing product to the CME swap future. So far, I have stuck with the CME, but I thought I should include a link to their exchange. Who knows, maybe I should be switching? Let me know if you have an opinion.

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Reformer Neomi Rao Sails Through Senate Confirmation to Become the Government’s Top Regulatory Analyst

If you squint your eyes enough, you can see Neomi Rao talking there with our own Damon Root! ||| ReasonToday the Senate confirmed Neomi Rao as administrator of the Office for Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), which is charged with vetting the federal government’s regulatory activities for cost-benefit sanity and recognizable legislative intent. Rao, founder of the Center for the Study of the Administrative State at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School, has a long track record of criticizing the accrual of power and latitude at the executive branch’s regulatory agencies (see Christian Britschgi’s detailed report from earlier this month). The vote was 59-36.

Six Democrats joined the entire Republican caucus and independent Angus King of Maine in voting yes. Key moderate Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) likely sealed the deal with her enthusiastic endorsement Monday: “I look forward to finding opportunities to join with the Trump Administration to reduce the regulatory burden on Missouri small businesses,” McCaskill said in a statement. “I’m hopeful about working with Ms. Rao to eliminate unnecessary regulations while protecting Missourians’ health and safety.” Rao had sailed through the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee last week by a vote of 11-4, including affirmatives from Democrats McCaskill, Tom Carper (Del.) and Heidi Heitkamp (N.D.). Heitkamp had said during Rao’s confirmation hearings, “we are very excited about the expertise you bring.” Only staunch regulatory activists seemed to sound the alarm against Rao, and they didn’t have much notable influence.

And when you smirk for the camera ||| ReasonHiring a knowledgeable regulatory reformer in this position is a big deal. As mentioned in this post of mine a month ago, when I was interviewing deregulatory specialists for my recent cover story on the possibilities of Donald Trump’s presidency, the number-one future indicator they told me to look out for was whether Trump would tab someone good for OIRA. How is Rao seen in that universe? Here’s Kent Lassman, president of the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), from earlier today:

CEI applauds the confirmation of Neomi Rao as the next Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. Administrator Rao brings years of respected scholarship on the regulatory process and a principled perspective to one of the most important jobs in Washington. She combines strong scholarly credentials with success as a policy entrepreneur….Now is the time to bring the regulatory state to heel, back to reason, and under the law. Neomi Rao is the right woman for the job.

And Rao—or at least a paragraph in Rao’s opening statement during her confirmation hearings—has drawn praise from one of her more respected Democratic predecessors at the job, Cass R. Sunstein, who directed OIRA from 2009-2012. Was Sunstein just working the refs a bit (Rao’s sentiments “are in real tension with numerous comments from the Trump administration,” he asserted), and/or trying to buck up his ex-colleagues who are dreading the new gal? Maybe. But consider this: His very next column, about the Senate’s Regulatory Accountability Act (read Eric Boehm on that here), was headlined “A Regulatory Reform Bill That Everyone Should Like: Look! Bipartisanship is alive, and cranking out good ideas.” Excerpt:

[C]ongressional Republicans, joined by some Democrats, have been thinking seriously about regulatory reform. They’ve produced an intelligent, constructive, complex, imperfect bill – the Regulatory Accountability Act of 2017 – that deserves careful attention. […]

Though progressive groups have raised some legitimate (if overheated) concerns, most of its provisions deserve bipartisan support. […]

The good news is that Portman and Heitkamp have produced a bill that reflects much of the learning of the last three decades, that emphasizes the importance of science and economics, and that could ultimately lead to higher benefits and lower costs. Its flaws need to be corrected – but it has a lot of promise.

Read the whole Sunstein piece for more detail (including criticisms and suggestions).

The Rao/Sunstein overlap reinforces the notion that the most serious policy work being done in the Trump administration is on regulation, where a long-sidelined intellectual tradition is finally being deployed and given latitude by a president in one of the areas he has the most power.

Read a huge pile of Trump-era Reason regulation pieces at the bottom of this link.

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Lawsuit Calls Seattle’s “Democracy Vouchers” Compelled Speech and a First Amendment Violation

voting signSeattle homeowners are tired of being forced to contribute tax dollars to candidates they do not support, some of whom campaign to further restrict their property rights.

A Pacific Legal Foundation lawsuit challenges Seattle’s Democracy Voucher program, which has so far dispensed $233,175 in special tax contributions to fund vouchers of up to $100 for city voters to contribute to their favorite local political candidates.

“When you are forced to give a certain amount of money to someone who then uses it to contribute it to a candidate,” Ethan Bevins, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, says, “that’s compelled speech in violation of the First Amendment.”

Bevins is representing Mark Elster, a Seattle homeowner and self-described “robust supporter of free markets,” who objects to being made to underwrite any part of a campaign for candidates, none of whom warrant his support.

So far, the voucher program isn’t quite as democratic as envisioned by its progressive sponsors. More than half of the total amount of contributions has gone to Jon Grant, a candidate for an open city council seat and someone who could charitably be described as left-of-center.

A former head of the Washington Tenants Union, Grant has endorsed a range of left-wing housing policies including rent control, mandating affordable housing units in new developments, caps on move-in fees, and giving collective bargaining privileges to tenants.

His opponent, Teresa Mosqueda, and the incumbent candidate for city attorney, Pete Holmes, are the only other candidates who have met the eligibility requirements for the vouchers.

Grant is a strong proponent of Democracy Vouchers, having received 93 percent of all his campaign donations from the program. Prior to the program, “only 1.5 percent of Seattleites donated to a local campaign. This lawsuit clearly demonstrates that the Pacific Legal Foundation is only interested in protecting the interests of the 1%,” Grant wrote in a blogpost on his campaign website.

A good deal of his field outreach has been directed at getting homeless people to sign up for the vouchers, and then give that money to him, a practice his campaign manager assures Seattle Weekly is not “exploiting the homeless.”

Grant has called the Foundation lawsuit “anti-democratic” and “desperate.”

The voucher program, Bevins said, has allowed Grant to do something remarkable. He has “pretty much drawn all his campaign money from a constituency that is inherently opposed to his positions,” Bevins said.

Few of the 410,000 registered voters in Seattle can make use of the Democracy Voucher program, even if there were candidates they wanted to support. The tax dollars that fund the vouchers is first come first serve, and not nearly enough is collected each year to ensure that each Seattleite gets a chance to participate.

The funding is capped at $3 million a year, meaning 30,000 or 7 percent of eligible Seattle voters are allowed to make campaign contributions in an election year. As the Seattle Times noted when it editorialized against the 2015 ballot initiative that created Democracy Vouchers, “the proposal counts on people not participating.”

In this first election since the program launched, it remains to be seen whether Grant’s manipulation of it will be followed by other candidates. The City Council designed the program for a review after 10 years.

Bevin hopes the court recognizing the vouchers for the constitutional abominations they are will end the program years before a review.

“When you are forced to become an unwilling vessel for a message you disagree with,” Bevins says, “that violates human dignity and it certainly violates the First Amendment.”

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London Property Bubble Bursting? UK In Unchartered Territory On Brexit and Election Mess

– London property bubble bursting? UK in unchartered territory on Brexit and election mess
– Evidence of downturn in London housing market

– Over 75% of London homes now selling below asking price
– Prime north London property down 6 per cent annually
– House prices have not fallen for three consecutive months since the 2009 crisis
– Bank of England report expresses worry over UK property market
– ‘Adverse shock’ to UK economy may amplify negative feedback loop

– Increased political and economic uncertainty has weakened fragile London buyer sentiment
– Bank of England Financial Stability Report: “Mortgages are the largest loan exposure for UK lenders”
– BOE FSR refers to a “self-reinforcing feedback loop” that, if triggered, would cause another 2008-style crisis in the UK


Is the London property market heading for tough times? The most recent housing figures and a new Bank of England report suggest it may well be.

Recent figures show that 77% of London houses sold in May went at below asking price, up from 72% in April. London as the capital of UK reflects international market but international investors have major concerns over uncertainties namely Brexit and the current state of the government. As a result London house prices are rising at their weakest rate in five years (if they are rising at all).

In prime estate London things are particularly bad, with prices in prime north and north west London falling by 6% in the last year.

Across the country, price drops in May signalled the third consecutive monthly drop, something which has not been seen since the 2009 crisis. Banks are well aware of what this could mean for them and as a result are now offering mortgages that scream ‘bubble bursting!’

Rates for 90% loans have tumbled to as low as 1.9% for two-year deals and just 2.55% for five-year fixes.

Yet, cheap mortgages are not enough. Buyers are getting worried whilst homeowners increase their desire to sell their properties, CityAM reports:

‘prospective buyers registering with estate agents fell from 381 people per branch in April to 350 in May, although that was up from 304 at the same time last year. The number of homes available rose 11 per cent to 40 per branch, up from 37 per branch in May last year.’

Danger for mortgage holders

Of course one of the major threats to the property market is not only the affordability of housing but the cost of borrowing.

The BoE’s Financial Stability Report draws attention to just how sensitive the country is to interest rate rises. Not only was ‘80% of new mortgage lending in 2016 either on a fixed rate for a period of less than five years or on a floating rate’ but ‘”mortgages are the largest loan exposure for UK lenders.’

This means that the next rate decision by the MPC in August will not only be taking into account concerns over the growing rates of real inflation but also the impact of a potential rate rise on millions of UK homeowners.

Should a rate rise occur then we will likely see a downward spiral which will leak into the rest of the economy. As homeowners struggle to keep up their unaffordable mortgage payments they will delay defaulting on their homes and instead avoid paying other debts such as credit cards and car loans.

Of course, a rate rise is not the only concern right now. Just the simple matter of having an economy with jobs so homeowners can actually pay their mortgages is a pretty key thing to try and manage. One of the more concerning charts in the BoE’s report is the representation of what would happen if UK unemployment increased from just below 5% as it is currently, to 8%.

This small move in unemployment would result in twice the number of households who have high debt service ratios — the most fragile mortgages out there. The estimate is represented by the yellow diamond in the chart above.

Adverse Shock? Which one to pick?

In the FSR from the BoE, an ‘adverse shock’ is referred to. It is this which will impact jobs, push up rates and ultimate lead to a negative feedback loop that will ‘amplify a downturn’.

The bank states, a ‘feedback loop between house prices and credit also arises in a downturn. An economic slowdown can reduce house prices. Due to the role of housing as collateral, lower house prices reduce the demand for, and supply of, credit. Expectations of further price reductions, which can result in sales of houses at heavily discounted prices (fire sales’), can further amplify house price falls, reinforcing the adverse feedback loop. The resulting deterioration in borrowers’  and lenders’ resilience will intensify a downturn.’

Brexit is the most obvious adverse shock for the UK economy at present but this does not mean that homeowners should take comfort from Mrs May’s positive negotiations. The truth is, we have no idea what the final Brexit package will look like or (more importantly) how it will really affect the UK economy.

The UK and its homeowners are at a real risk of being blinkered by Brexit. The FSR is clearly trying to present the divorce from the EU as an ‘adverse shock’ (they have a special section on Brexit) but readers must remember this is not the only threat to the bubble. As we explained in yesterday’s comment on shrinkflation in relation to price inflation, the issues in the housing market have been there for many years.

Brexit is the latest scapegoat for the struggling housing market. One headline in a local London rag reads, ‘Brexit to blame: prime north London property down 6 per cent annually.’

Yes, Brexit may well be the final trigger, but the pieces were all lined up for the gun to fire.

News and Commentary

Gold steady as dollar hovers near ten-month lows (Reuters)

Financial stocks lead Asian market gains (Marketwatch)

Central Banks Roil Markets as Stocks, Euro Jump (Bloomberg)

Wall St. higher as banks rise; ECB comment reassessed (Reuters)

Mortgage applications drop 6% as wealthy buyers ‘step back’ (CNBC)

Source: Thomson Reuters via Mises.org

Gold Retains “Buying Power” As “Real Money”  – Bonner (Bonner & Partners)

The Super Bubble Is In Trouble (Mises)

Jim Grant Explains The Gold Standard (Zerohedge)

Bank Of England Orders Banks To Boost Capital To “Protect From Rising Risks” (Zerohedge)

Pending Home Sales Tumble in May for Third Straight Month (Forbes)

Interview with Goldcore at Mining Investment Europe (YouTube.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

29 Jun: USD 1,246.60, GBP 959.88 & EUR 1,093.14 per ounce
28 Jun: USD 1,251.60, GBP 976.25 & EUR 1,101.91 per ounce
27 Jun: USD 1,250.40, GBP 980.31 & EUR 1,111.36 per ounce
26 Jun: USD 1,240.85, GBP 975.56 & EUR 1,109.32 per ounce
23 Jun: USD 1,256.30, GBP 987.70 & EUR 1,125.27 per ounce
22 Jun: USD 1,251.40, GBP 988.36 & EUR 1,120.13 per ounce
21 Jun: USD 1,247.05, GBP 989.04 & EUR 1,118.98 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

29 Jun: USD 16.83, GBP 12.98 & EUR 14.76 per ounce
28 Jun: USD 16.78, GBP 13.08 & EUR 14.78 per ounce
27 Jun: USD 16.66, GBP 13.07 & EUR 14.79 per ounce
26 Jun: USD 16.53, GBP 12.98 & EUR 14.79 per ounce
23 Jun: USD 16.71, GBP 13.12 & EUR 14.97 per ounce
22 Jun: USD 16.58, GBP 13.09 & EUR 14.85 per ounce
21 Jun: USD 16.51, GBP 13.03 & EUR 14.81 per ounce


Recent Market Updates

– Shrinkflation – Real Inflation Much Higher Than Reported
– Goldman, Citi Turn Positive On Gold – Despite “Mysterious” Flash Crash
– Worst Crash In Our Lifetime Coming – Jim Rogers
– Go for Gold – Win a beautiful Gold Sovereign coin
– Only Gold Lasts Forever
– Your Future Wealth Depends on what You Decide to Keep and Invest in Now
– Inflation is no longer in stealth mode
– James Rickards: Gold Will Start Heading Higher On “Dwindling” Supply
– Billionaires Invest In Gold
– Brexit and UK election impact UK housing
– In Gold we Trust: Must See Gold Charts and Research
– Pension Funds, Sovereign Wealth Funds, Central Banks “Stock Up” on Gold “Amid Uncertainty”
– 4 Charts Show Gold May Be Heading Much Higher

Important Guides

For your perusal, below are our most popular guides in 2017:

Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Switzerland

Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Singapore

Essential Guide to Tax Free Gold Sovereigns (UK)

Please share our research with family, friends and colleagues who you think would benefit from being informed by it.

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Susan Rice Agrees To Testify Before House Intel Panel In Closed Session: Report

Just one day after John Podesta appeared before a closed session of the House Intelligence Committee to offer his thoughts on “Russian meddling”, CNN’s anonymous sources are apparently telling them that Obama’s former National Security Advisor, Susan Rice, will also appear before a closed session of the committee next month.  Here is more from CNN:

The House intelligence committee plans to interview Susan Rice next month as part of its investigation into Russia meddling in the US election last year, a high-profile target for Republicans who accuse President Barack Obama’s former national security adviser of improperly handling classified intelligence reports, according to sources familiar with the private talks.

 

Rice has vehemently denied doing anything wrong. But she has yet to answer questions from lawmakers, including declining a request to appear before a Senate judiciary subcommittee in May. And now, she has agreed to appear in a closed-door session that is expected to take place before the House departs for its August recess.

 

“Ambassador Rice is cooperating with bipartisan Russia investigations conducted by the Intelligence Committees as she said she would,” said Erin Pelton, a spokesperson for Rice, who served as national security adviser and the US ambassador to the United Nations under Obama.

Rice has denied that her unmasking of Michael Flynn in numerous foreign intelligence documents was in any way wrong and/or intended solely as a means to exact political retribution for an election that went horribly wrong for her party. 

Instead, Rice recently sat down for an interview with New York Magazine and explained that she’s unfairly being targeted by a bunch of racist, sexist Republicans…shocking, we never would have seen that coming.

“Let me just put it this way, I do not leap to the simple explanation that it’s only about race and gender. I’m trying to keep my theories to myself until I’m ready to come out with them. It’s not because I don’t have any.”

SR

 

Rice’s testimony is even more important in light of a newly released court order from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) which found that the Obama administration routinely violated American privacy protections while scouring through overseas intercepts and failed to disclose the extent of the problems until the final days before Donald Trump was elected president last fall.  In describing the violations, the FISA court said the illegal searches conducted by the NSA under Obama were “widespread” and created a “very serious Fourth Amendment issue.”

The court order goes on to reveal that NSA analysts had been conducting illegal queries targeting American citizens “with much greater frequency than had previously been disclosed to the Court”…an issue which the court described as a “very serious Fourth Amendment issue.”

“Since 2011, NSA’s minimization procedures have prohibited use of U.S.-person identifiers to query the results of upstream Internet collection under Section 702.  The October 26, 2016 Notice informed the Court that NSA analysts had been conducting such queries in violation of that prohibition, with much greater frequency than had previously been disclosed to the Court.”

 

“At the October 26, 2016 hearing, the Court ascribed the government’s failure to disclose those IG and OCO reviews at the October 4, 2016 hearing to an institutional ‘lack of candor’ on NSA’s part and emphasized that ‘this is a very serious Fourth Amendment issue.'”

FISA

 

But, we wouldn’t worry too much…clearly the FISA court is run by a bunch of racist, sexist people as well…

 

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The Main Reason Congress Is Getting So Little Done Is… They Will Have 218 Days Off In 2017

Authored by Michael Snyder via The End of The American Dream blog,

Would you like to have a job that gave you 218 days off a year? According to the official calendar put out by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, the House of Representatives will only be in session for 147 days in 2017. And that is actually an increase from last year. In 2016, there were only 131 legislative days for the House. So if you are wondering why Congress never seems to get anything done, this is one of the biggest reasons. The sad truth is that members of Congress simply do not spend a lot of time doing what they were elected to do.

If you are an average American worker with a full-time job, you probably put in around 240 working days a year. If you have to work that hard, why can’t Congress?

And actually things used to be even worse. The New York Times looked back at 2013 once it was done, and they found that the House was only in session for 942 hours for the entire year. When you break that down, it comes to about 18 hours a week.

If you go all the way back to 2006, there were just 104 legislative days in the House. It is almost as if they just decided to take pretty much that whole year off.

This is what I am talking about when I say that we need to “flush the toilet”. Those that are fortunate enough to be chosen to represent us in Washington should be some of the hardest working people in the entire country, and unfortunately we are getting just the exact opposite.

In the past there have been efforts to make members of Congress work full work weeks, but those efforts have always ended up failing

Some attempts have been made to force members of Congress to work full weeks. In 2015, for example, a Republican lawmaker from Florida, Rep. David Jolly, introduced legislation that would have required the House to be in session 40 hours a week when members of the House were in Washington, D.C.”A work week in Washington should be no different than a work week in every other town across the nation,” Jolly said at the time. Jolly’s measure failed to gain traction.

Congress gets especially lazy during the summer months. Many Americans don’t realize that every year Congress takes the entire month of August off. And actually, the House will be on vacation from July 29th all the way to September 4th in 2017.

Wouldn’t it be nice if you had the entire month of August off every year?

This year, U.S. Senator David Perdue is proposing that the August vacation be canceled because there is so much for Congress to do. According to Senator Perdue, there are five major tasks that need to be accomplished by September 30th

First, we have to complete the work on the first phase of repealing Obamacare and fixing our health care system.

 

Second, we have to pass a budget resolution that will work within the reconciliation process for changing the tax code.

 

Third, we have to use the appropriations process to fund the federal government by the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.

 

Fourth, we have to deal with our debt limit. The Treasury Department has used extraordinary measures to buy time since the national debt hit its limit of $19.8 trillion in March.

 

Fifth, we have to finally act on our once-in-a-generation opportunity to change our archaic tax code, but we will only be able to do so if we achieve the first four priorities.

If those things don’t get done in time, members of Congress should not expect the voting public to have any sympathy for them.

Of course there are many that would argue that members of Congress actually work very hard and that they need all of that time off to “serve their constituents”. The following comes from Snopes

Members of Congress have two jobs: represent their constituents and govern. These responsibilities do not always go hand in hand. Representing constituents means speaking with them in person, holding town hall meetings, organizing rallies, attending to casework, and otherwise being present in the district or state they represent. This is not easily done from a Washington office. Supporting or opposing legislation is an important part of a member’s? job. However, it does not come close to capturing members?’ range of responsibilities. This is why even when Congress is out of session, members are at work. Most members of Congress work a five-to-six-day week. The representative aspect of Congress?’s job is almost completely ignored in these statistics.

Yes, without a doubt it is important for members of Congress to go back and interact with those that elected them.

But at the end of the day their main job is to do the work that they were elected to do.

And even when they are in Washington, many of these Congress critters are spending much of their time on activities that have nothing to do with legislation. For example, in his new book entitled “Giant Of The Senate”, Senator Al Franken admits that he often spends much of his day on the phone raising money…

“It’s not uncommon to have three straight hours of call time scheduled as part of your day. … It’s brutal.”

This is why we need federal term limits. If members of Congress were not so busy constantly raising money for their next elections maybe they would have time to actually get something done in Washington.

In November the American people gave the Republicans control of the White House, the Senate and the House of Representatives. Enormous amounts of time, money and energy went into those campaigns, and now we want to see some results.

Instead of flying off for a month-long vacation in August, Congress should stay in town and get to work. The Republicans have already wasted much of the first half of 2017, and the mid-term elections are right around the corner.

It is time to change the way that Washington works, because right now we have a system that is deeply broken.

via http://ift.tt/2smerpi Tyler Durden

Senators to See Comey Memos, House to Vote on Immigration Bills, Germany to Legalize Gay Marriage: P.M. Links

  • Trump and ComeyThe Senate Intelligence Committee will get to see the memos written by fired FBI Director James Comey about his meetings with President Donald Trump.
  • Germany is poised to finally legalize gay marriage recognition. German Chancellor Angela Merkel had opposed it for years (something to remind your friends who insist that European leaders are so much more enlightened than ours).
  • The House today is expected to vote on two bills that would increase penalties for illegal immigrants who commit crimes or repeatedly return to the United States after being deported and would potentially deny federal grants to sanctuary cities who don’t assist the feds with deportation orders.
  • A guy wanted to become a YouTube star by blocking a bullet shot by his girlfriend with an encyclopedia over his chest. Instead, he is dead.
  • U.S.-led coalition forces believe the liberation of Mosul, Iraq, from Islamic State militants is “imminent.”
  • Prosecutors have dropped perjury charges against the former state trooper who arrested Sandra Bland. Bland was famously arrested at a traffic stop and then later hanged herself in jail. The officer was accused of making a false statement in his police report. In exchange for the prosecution dropping the case, the former officer has agreed to never again seek work in law enforcement.

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Blue Apron Goes Red

Having priced at the low-end ($10) of an almost unprecedented cut in IPO range, Blue Apron opened this morning at $10, traded up to $11 amid exuberance from Bob Pisani desperate to show how the great IPO market was back… but tumbled back to $10 by the close.

Worse still, having been defended twice, Blue Apron shares broke below the IPO price in the after-market, trading $9.95…

We wonder if Morgan Stanley will support this tomorrow…

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The “Diplomatic Quagmire” In Qatar Deepens 3 Days Before The Saudi Ultimatum Expires

While the Qatar crisis may have slipped from the front pages, the diplomatic standoff continues to deteriorate with the latest escalation emerging yesterday, when the UAE’s ambassador to Moscow gave an interview to the UK’s Guardian newspaper, revealing the steely resolve of the Gulf States, led by Saudi Arabia, who initially brought their charges and subsequent sanctions to bear on the tiny country.

Omar Ghobash, the UAE’s ambassador, said that the states are considering “further economic pressure” and that they would be “willing to make themselves subject to the same western monitoring regime as Qatar to ensure key figures are not privately funding extremist groups”.

As a reminder, Qatar only has until July 3 to comply with a list of 13 demands imposed by the Saudi-led bloc, and on Tuesday, Saudi described the demands as non-negotiable: Doha must “amend its behaviour” or “remain isolated”, says Riyadh’s foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir.

Meanwhile, Turkey’s President Erdogan has been ramping up his rhetoric in support of Qatar, and has been contemplating the deployment of troops to Doha, saying that the ultimatum “breaches international law”. Qatar is now reliant on Iran and Turkey for food imports.

Unless the demands are met by July 3 (and it seems highly unlikely that they would be or could be for some – such as the complete shutdown of Al Jazeera station that has been demanded) then this situation is likely to get a lot worse before it gets any better.

Meanwhile, as Citi notes, there has been a continued lack of reaction from ‘the West’: there is also confusion as to the stance of key historical players in the Middle East, such as the UK and the US, who have either said very little – Trump once called Qatar a “haven for terrorism”, while Rex Tillerson has twice upbraided Saudi Arabia’s approach. Last Friday, a White House spokesman told the Guardian: “The United States is still accessing the list and we are in communication with all parties. As we have said, we want to see the parties resolve this dispute and restore unity among our partners in the region, while ensuring all countries are stopping funding for terrorist groups.”

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“This Is Getting Out Of Hand” – Another Vol Event Strikes As FANGs Face Worst Week In 5 Months

As legendary market technician John Bollinger tweeted today…

"Another volatility event in the US stock market. At the lows S&P -1.4%, VIX +51.1%. This is going to get out of hand one day."

And quite an event it was… VIX spiked to 15.16 and liquidity collapsed before panic-vol-sellers struck again (as banks hit unchanged) slamming VIX back to an 11 handle by the close

While S&P 'VIX' was slammed, Nasdaq 'VIX' remained elevated…

Risk Parity funds getting hit as stocks and bonds are dumped…

 

Of course, dip-buyers struck…

 

The last losing month for Nasdaq was last October, and for now it's in the red…(NOTE – S&P bounced as it crossed the unch line for June)

 

On the day, Nasdaq was the biggest loser (and The Dow managed to outperform thanks to JPM)

 

Nasdaq broke below its 50DMA, but as VIX was crushed, every effort was made to get the tech-heavy index back above this technical level..

 

FANG Stocks were ugly and while banks gave up their gains early, buyers appeared as they hit unchanged…

 

The Big Banks tumbled off their gap-up-open, but ince they hit unchanged, buyers re-appeared…

 

Stocks are falling back to the divergence in breadth…

 

While stocks were lower, bonds were also sold with Treasury yields up across the curve…

 

10Y Yields extended their run to 5 week highs…

 

The yield curve also continued to steepen today, back to flat on the month before falling this afternoon..

This is the biggest 3-day steepening in 2s30s since the election.

The Dollar Index is down 6 days of the last 7… to its lowest close since Oct 2016

 

Cable and EUR strength are the dominants anchors around the dollar's neck this week as USDJPY continues to tread water…

 

Despite the dollar weakness, commodities all saw selling pressure today with gold and silver now lower on the week…

 

So Stocks Down, Bonds Down, Credit Down, Dollar Down, Oil Down, Gold Down, Copper Down.. VIX Up – Smells like a big derisking day.

Is it time for reality to dawn on stocks?

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